Lies,
kidnapping
and a
mysterious
laptop
You have
been told
that the
Venezuelan
President
supports the
Farc thugs
By Johann
Hari
07/07/08 "The
Independent"
-- - Sometimes
you hear a
stray
sentence on
the news
that makes
you realise
you have
been lied
to.
Deliberately
lied to;
systematically
lied to;
lied to for
a purpose.
If you
listened
closely over
the past few
days, you
could have
heard one
such
sentence
passing in
the
night-time
of news.
As Ingrid
Betancourt
emerged
after
six-and-a-half
years –
sunken and
shrivelled
but radiant
with courage
– one of the
first people
she thanked
was Hugo
Chavez.
What? If you
follow the
news
coverage,
you have
been told
that the
Venezuelan
President
supports the
Farc thugs
who have
been holding
her hostage.
He paid them
$300m to
keep killing
and to buy
uranium for
a dirty
bomb, in a
rare break
from
dismantling
democracy at
home and
dealing
drugs. So
how can this
moment of
dissonance
be
explained?
Yes: you
have been
lied to –
about one of
the most
exciting and
original
experiments
in economic
redistribution
and direct
democracy
anywhere on
earth. And
the reason
is crude:
crude oil.
The ability
of democracy
and freedom
to spread to
poor
countries
may depend
on whether
we can
unscramble
these
propaganda
fictions.
Venezuela
sits on one
of the
biggest
pools of oil
left
anywhere. If
you find
yourself in
this
position,
the rich
governments
of the world
– the US and
EU – ask one
thing of
you: pump
the petrol
and the
profits our
way, using
our
corporations.
If you do
that, we
will whisk
you up the
Mall in a
golden
carriage, no
matter what.
The "King"
of Saudi
Arabia
oversees a
torturing
tyranny
where half
the
population –
women – are
placed under
house
arrest, and
jihadis are
pumped out
by the dozen
to attack
us. It
doesn't
matter. He
gives us the
oil, so we
hold his
hand and
whisper
sweet
crude-nothings
in his ear.
It has
always been
the same
with
Venezuela –
until now.
Back in
1908, the US
government
set up its
ideal
Venezuelan
regime: a
dictator who
handed the
oil over
fast and so
freely that
he didn't
even bother
to keep
receipts,
never mind
ask for a
cut. But in
1998 the
Venezuelan
people
finally said
"enough".
They elected
Hugo Chavez.
The
President
followed
their
democratic
demands: he
increased
the share of
oil profits
taken by the
state from a
pitiful one
per cent to
33 per cent.
He used the
money to
build
hospitals
and schools
and
subsidised
supermarkets
in the
tin-and-mud
shanty towns
where he
grew up, and
where most
of his
countrymen
still live.
I can take
you to any
random
barrio in
the high
hills that
ring Caracas
and show you
the results.
You will
meet women
like
Francisca
Moreno, a
gap-toothed
76-year-old
granny I
found
sitting in a
tin shack,
at the end
of a long
path across
the mud made
out of
broken
wooden
planks. From
her doorway
she looked
down on the
shining
white marble
of Caracas's
rich
district. "I
went blind
15 years ago
because of
cataracts,"
she
explained,
and in the
old
Venezuela
people like
her didn't
see doctors.
"I am poor,"
she said,
"so that was
that." But
she voted
for Chavez.
A free
clinic
appeared two
years later
in her
barrio, and
she was
taken soon
after for an
operation
that
restored her
sight. "Once
I was blind,
but now I
see!" she
said,
laughing.
In 2003, two
distinguished
Wall Street
consulting
firms
conducted
the most
detailed
study so far
of economic
change under
Chavez. They
found that
the poorest
half of the
country have
seen their
incomes soar
by 130 per
cent after
inflation.
Today, there
are 19,571
primary care
doctors – an
increase by
a factor of
10. When
Chavez came
to power,
just 35 per
cent of
Venezuelans
told
Latinobarometro,
the Gallup
of Latin
America,
they were
happy with
how their
democracy
worked.
Today it is
59 per cent,
the
second-highest
in the
hemisphere.
For the rich
world's
governments
– and
especially
for the oil
companies,
who pay for
their
political
campaigns –
this throws
up a serious
problem. We
are addicted
to oil. We
need it. We
crave it.
And we want
it on our
terms. The
last time I
saw Chavez,
he told me
he would
like to sell
oil
differently
in the
future:
while poor
countries
should get
it for $10 a
barrel, rich
countries
should pay
much more –
perhaps
towards
$200. And he
has said
that if the
rich
countries
keep
intimidating
the rest he
will shift
to selling
to China
instead.
Start the
sweating.
But Western
governments
cannot
simply say:
"We want the
oil, our
corporations
need the
profits, so
let's smash
the elected
leaders
standing in
our way."
They know
ordinary
Americans
and
Europeans
would gag.
So they had
to invent
lies. They
come in
waves, each
one swelling
as the last
crashes into
incredulity.
First they
announced
Chavez was a
dictator.
This ignored
that he came
to power in
a totally
free and
open
election,
the
Venezuelan
press
remains
uncensored
and in total
opposition
to him, and
he has just
accepted
losing a
referendum
to extend
his term and
will stand
down in
2013.
When that
tactic
failed, the
oil industry
and the
politicians
they
lubricate
shifted
strategy.
They
announced
that Chavez
was a
supporter of
Terrorism
(it
definitely
has a
capital T).
The Farc is
a Colombian
guerrilla
group that
started in
the 1960s as
a peasant
defence
network, but
soon the
pigs began
to look like
farmers and
they became
a foul,
kidnapping
mafia. Where
is the
evidence
Chavez
funded them?
On 1 March,
the
Colombian
government
invaded
Ecuador and
blew up a
Farc
training
camp. A few
hours later,
it announced
it had found
a pristine
laptop in
the rubble,
and had
already
rummaged
through the
39.5 million
pages of
Microsoft
Word
documents it
contained to
find
cast-iron
"proof" that
Chavez was
backing the
Farc.
Ingrid's
sister,
Astrid
Betancourt,
says it is
plainly
fake. The
camp had
been totally
burned to
pieces and
the
computers
had clearly,
she says,
been "in the
hands of the
Colombian
government
for a very
long time".
Far from
fuelling the
guerrillas,
Chavez has
repeatedly
pleaded with
the Farc to
disarm. He
managed to
negotiate
the release
of two
high-profile
hostages –
hence
Betancourt's
swift
thanks. He
said: "The
time of guns
has passed.
Guerilla
warfare is
history."
So what now?
Now they
claim he is
a drug
dealer, he
funds
Hezbollah,
he is
insane.
Sometimes
they even
stumble on
some of the
real
non-fiction
reasons to
criticise
Chavez and
use them as
propaganda
tools. (See
our Open
House blog
later today
for a
discussion
of this). As
the world's
oil supplies
dry up, the
desire to
control
Venezuela's
pools will
only
increase.
The US
government
is already
funding
separatist
movements in
Zulia
province,
along the
border with
Colombia,
where
Venezuela's
largest
oilfields
lie. They
hope they
can break
away this
whiter-skinned,
anti-Chavez
province and
then drink
deep of the
petrol
there.
Until we
break our
addiction to
oil, our
governments
will always
try to
snatch petro-profits
away from
women like
Francisca
Moreno. And
we – oil
addicts all
– will be
tempted to
ignore the
strange,
dissonant
sentences we
sometimes
hear on the
news and
lie, blissed-out,
in the lies.
j.hari@independent.co.uk
Šindependent.co.uk
